Sequence analyses of herpesviral enzymes suggest an ancient origin for human sexual behavior.

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Abstract

Comparison of the amino acid sequences of the deoxythymidine kinases of herpes simplex (HSV) and of marmoset herpes viruses (MHV) suggests a divergence time of 8 to 10 million years ago for HSV-1 and -2. Like MHV, HSV-1 and -2 cause local infections in their natural hosts, and direct contact between two individuals during the brief period of infectivity is needed for transmission. Because B virus, a nearer relative of HSV, depends on both oral and genital routes of transmission, we postulate that ancestral HSV (aHSV) was similar, and that for HSV-1 and -2 to diverge, genital and oral sites had to become microbiologically somewhat isolated from each other, while oral--oral and genital--genital contact had to be facilitated to maintain both aHSV strains. We propose that acquisition of continual sexual attractiveness by the ancestral human female and the adoption of close face-to-face mating, two hallmarks of human sexual behavior, provided the conditions for the divergence.

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APA

Gentry, G. A., Lowe, M., Alford, G., & Nevins, R. (1988). Sequence analyses of herpesviral enzymes suggest an ancient origin for human sexual behavior. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 85(8), 2658–2661. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.85.8.2658

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